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In Africa Who controls the resources—and for whose benefit? (Continued)

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Expanded profiles for East Africa, Francophone countries, or resource-by-resource deep dives (e.g. cobalt, lithium, oil)

East Africa Profiles-

1. Ethiopia

  • Main Resources: Gold, Tantalum, Potash, Hydropower (GERD)

  • Control: State-owned companies, some foreign investors; land leased to Gulf & Indian agribusinesses

  • Key Companies: MIDROC Gold (owned by Al Amoudi), Chinese firms in mining/infrastructure

  • Who Benefits:

    • Winners: Government (infrastructure diplomacy), foreign investors

    • Losers: Local farmers (land grabs), pastoralists displaced by dams, transparency is low

2. Kenya

  • Main Resources: Titanium, Soda Ash, Rare Earths, Oil (Turkana)

  • Control: Foreign companies (mining); nascent oil sector with state oversight

  • Key Companies: Base Titanium (Australia), Tullow Oil (UK)

  • Who Benefits:

    • Winners: Export revenue, foreign firms

    • Losers: Local communities in Turkana (land conflicts, minimal services)

3. Uganda

  • Main Resources: Oil, Gold, Coffee, Cobalt

  • Control: Heavily state-influenced; oil sector still developing

  • Key Companies: TotalEnergies, CNOOC (China), UNOC (Uganda National Oil Company)

  • Who Benefits:

    • Winners: State elite, foreign oil firms

    • Losers: Environmental risks to Lake Albert, human rights issues in pipeline construction

4. Tanzania

  • Main Resources: Gold, Natural Gas, Graphite, Rare Earths

  • Control: Mixed; recent shift toward more state control under mining reforms

  • Key Companies: Barrick Gold, AngloGold, various Australian and Chinese mining companies

  • Who Benefits:

    • Winners: Government (better royalties), international partners

    • Losers: Artisanal miners, some local communities

Francophone Africa Profiles

5. Mali

  • Main Resources: Gold, Cotton

  • Control: Gold dominated by foreign companies; cotton largely state-organized

  • Key Companies: Barrick Gold, B2Gold (Canada), AngloGold

  • Who Benefits:

    • Winners: Foreign companies, military elites

    • Losers: Rural communities, environment, with increasing insecurity from armed groups

6. Niger

  • Main Resources: Uranium, Oil

  • Control: Historically French via Orano; now shifting to Russian/Chinese interest

  • Key Companies: Orano (France), CNPC (China), Savannah Energy (UK)

  • Who Benefits:

    • Winners: Foreign nations (nuclear fuel), national elite

    • Losers: Local people in Arlit region (radiation risks, minimal development)

7. Senegal

  • Main Resources: Phosphates, Gold, Offshore Oil & Gas

  • Control: Senegalese state partnerships with foreign investors

  • Key Companies: BP, Kosmos Energy, Petrosen (national oil company)

  • Who Benefits:

    • Winners: Potential future revenue for state

    • Losers: Concerns over contracts, fisheries impact

8. Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast)

  • Main Resources: Cocoa, Oil, Gold

  • Control: Government-regulated but highly open to foreign firms

  • Key Companies: Perseus Mining, Eni, TotalEnergies

  • Who Benefits:

    • Winners: Agro-export economy, multinationals

    • Losers: Cocoa farmers (price volatility), mining communities

Resource-Specific Deep Dives-

Cobalt (Key to Electric Vehicles & Batteries)

  • Primary Source: DR Congo (over 70% of world supply)

  • Control: Glencore, China Molybdenum, artisanal miners

  • Concerns: Child labor, toxic waste, informal mining

  • Geopolitics: US, EU, and China competing to secure supply chains

Lithium (Essential for Green Tech)

  • Countries: Zimbabwe, Namibia, Mali, DRC

  • Control: Chinese firms dominate (Sinomine, Zhejiang Huayou, Chengxin Lithium)

  • Opportunities: African governments pushing for local processing

  • Challenges: Land displacement, poor oversight, minimal benefit to locals

Oil & Gas

  • Major Producers: Nigeria, Angola, Libya, Algeria, Egypt, Ghana, Equatorial Guinea

  • Control: Mix of state-owned firms and global giants (Shell, Total, Eni, ExxonMobil)

  • Challenges: Corruption, volatility, "Dutch disease" (undermining other sectors)

  • Future Risks: Global shift to renewables may shrink demand.

Resource Control Profiles: East Africa vs Francophone Africa

Region Country Main Resource(s) Foreign Influence Key Companies Who Benefits
East Africa Ethiopia Gold, Potash, Tantalum China, Gulf States MIDROC, Chinese firms Elites, foreign investors
  Kenya Titanium, Oil, Rare Earths UK, Australia Tullow Oil, Base Titanium Foreign firms, elites
  Uganda Oil, Gold China, France TotalEnergies, CNOOC Government, foreign oil firms
  Tanzania Gold, Gas, Graphite Canada, China, Australia Barrick Gold, AngloGold State, investors
Francophone Africa Mali Gold Canada, Russia Barrick, B2Gold Foreign miners, elites
  Niger Uranium, Oil France, China, Russia Orano, CNPC Elites, foreign governments
  Senegal Phosphates, Oil & Gas UK, USA BP, Kosmos Energy Government, international partners
  Ivory Coast Cocoa, Gold, Oil France, Canada Perseus Mining, Total

1. Lithium (Electric Vehicle Boom Mineral)

Country Major Sites Foreign Influence Key Companies Who Benefits
Zimbabwe Bikita, Arcadia China, Australia Zhejiang Huayou, Prospect Lithium Chinese firms, local elites
Dem. Rep. Congo Manono China AVZ Minerals, Zijin Mining Foreign investors, gov. elites
Namibia Uis, Karibib Australia, China Lepidico, Desert Lion Foreign miners, state royalties
Mali Bougouni, Goulamina China, UK Ganfeng Lithium, Kodal Minerals Foreign firms, elite class

China dominates lithium investments; locals often get few jobs or environmental protections.


2. Uranium (Nuclear Power & Defense)

Country Major Sites Foreign Influence Key Companies Who Benefits
Niger Arlit, Imouraren France, China, Russia Orano (France), CNNC France, government elites
Namibia Rossing, Husab China, Canada China General Nuclear, Rio Tinto Foreign states, some state revenue
South Africa Karoo Basin France, India Uranium One, Indian firms Private sector, foreign buyers

France is heavily reliant on Niger’s uranium for its nuclear power — but local communities remain impoverished.

3. Oil & Gas (Top Revenue Resource)

Country Key Basins/Fields Foreign Influence Key Companies Who Benefits
Nigeria Niger Delta, Offshore US, UK, China Shell, Chevron, Total, NNPC Gov. elites, foreign firms
Angola Offshore fields US, China, EU Sonangol, Total, Chevron Elites, foreign investors
Libya Sirte Basin, Murzuq Italy, France ENI, Total, NOC Political factions, European markets
Mozambique Rovuma Basin (Gas) US, France, China TotalEnergies, ExxonMobil, CNPC Elites, LNG export buyers
Senegal Sangomar, GTA Gas UK, Australia BP, Kosmos Energy Gov. + foreign stakeholders

➡ Despite vast oil wealth, countries like Nigeria and Angola still face fuel shortages domestically.

4. Gold (Monetary & Tech Use)

Country Key Mining Areas Foreign Influence Key Companies Who Benefits
Ghana Obuasi, Tarkwa Canada, Australia AngloGold Ashanti, Newmont Exporters, elites
South Africa Witwatersrand Basin USA, UK Gold Fields, Harmony Gold Mining houses, some local revenue
Mali Sadiola, Loulo Canada, Russia Barrick Gold, B2Gold Foreign firms, local military gov
Burkina Faso Essakane, Houndé Canada IAMGOLD, Endeavour Mining Foreign firms, unstable benefits

➡ Gold is often smuggled out of countries through informal routes, robbing governments of billions in tax revenue.

Comparison Table: Resource Control vs Benefit

Country Resource Who Owns the Land Who Profits Most
DR Congo Cobalt, Lithium State-owned, tribal lands China (CMOC), Glencore, Congolese elites
Zimbabwe Lithium State, Indigenous lands Chinese firms, political elites
Niger Uranium State, Tuareg lands France (Orano), China
Nigeria Oil State, Niger Delta communities Shell, Chevron, Nigerian elites
Ghana Gold State, traditional stools Newmont, government elites
Angola Oil State TotalEnergies, Chevron, government
Mali Gold, Lithium State, ethnic militias Barrick, Russian groups, military elites
Namibia Uranium, Lithium State, local communities China (CGN), Rio Tinto

Timeline: Who Controlled Africa’s Key Resources (2005–2025)

Year China Influence Western Influence African Control
2005 Low (2/10) High (10/10) Minimal (1/10)
2010 Growing (4/10) Still dominant Slight increase
2015 Competitive Declining Increasing
2020 Surpassing West Moderate Growing slowly
2025 High (10/10) Moderate (5/10) Still limited
  • China’s role grew rapidly in the 2010s with Belt and Road deals and mining contracts.

  • Western dominance (esp. France, UK, US companies) began fading in some zones.

  • African governments have slowly increased formal control, but actual profit-sharing remains unequal, often favoring foreign and elite groups.

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